A brief word on the Chronicle opinion piece on "the twitterization of the academic mind": I looked at the author's website and CV and note that he appears to be a white man whose work focuses on race and C19 literature and culture, especially African American 1/
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Anna Julia Cooper, W. E. B. DuBois, Carter G. Woodson, and so many others would beg to differ, not only about the political and social stakes of scholarship about Black history and life, but also about the capacities of broader publics to engage, understand, and make use of 4/
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rigorous scholarship. The exciting work and extraordinary success of a project like
@BlkPerspectives, through which founder@ccamrun2 and editors make scholarly work on Black thought, history, and culture accessible and foster conversation on the blog and on twitter, 5/Näytä tämä ketju -
builds on paths charted by Black scholars, teachers, and activists who used multiple platforms for discussion, debate, and education and understood their scholarship as urgently and necessarily connected to Black people outside the academy. Fortunately, we have lots of great 6/
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scholars of race and Black history on here who model the same sorts of scholarly practices and from whom I learn every day. And we all learn from conversations with others on here who are not in the academy. 7/7
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Uusi keskustelu -
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Kiitos. Käytämme tätä aikajanasi parantamiseen. KumoaKumoa
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That's a quote? What an ass! (Don't have access to the article and don't care enough to do what I have to do to get access.)
Kiitos. Käytämme tätä aikajanasi parantamiseen. KumoaKumoa
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Gross!!! This is the entire problem!
Kiitos. Käytämme tätä aikajanasi parantamiseen. KumoaKumoa
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He means this seriously?
Kiitos. Käytämme tätä aikajanasi parantamiseen. KumoaKumoa
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Lataaminen näyttää kestävän hetken.
Twitter saattaa olla ruuhkautunut tai ongelma on muuten hetkellinen. Yritä uudelleen tai käy Twitterin tilasivulla saadaksesi lisätietoja.